Last reviewed dd mmm yyyy. Last edited dd mmm yyyy
Assessment and monitoring of disease
Assessment of a COPD patient should be carried out to guide management and should include the level of airflow limitation, impact on the patient's health status and the risk of future events (such as exacerbation, hospital admissions or death) (1).
The Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease (GOLD) recommends that COPD assessment should consider the following aspects of the disease separately:
GOLD 1 | mild | FEV1 ≥80% of predicted |
GOLD 2 | moderate | FEV1 50–79% of predicted |
GOLD 3 | severe | FEV1 30–49% of predicted |
GOLD 4 | very severe | FEV1 <30% of predicted |
GOLD ABE Assessment Tool
The "ABE" assessment tool has been developed by GOLD which incorporates a patient's symptomatic assessment with spirometric classification and/or risk of exacerbation.
GOLD criteria (1)
Classification of severity of airflow limitation in COPD: In pulmonary function testing, a post-bronchodilator FEV1/FVC ratio of <0.70 is commonly considered diagnostic for COPD.
The GOLD system categorises airflow limitation into stages. In patients with FEV1/FVC <0.70:
The refined ABE assessment tool is provided in Figure 2.10 of the GOLD 2024 report (1).
The categories are defined via consideration of two specific features:
Category A is defined by:
Moderate or Severe Exacerbation History | Symptom Score |
0 or 1 (not leading to hospital admission) | mMRC 0 or 1 or CAT <10 |
Category B is defined by:
Moderate or Severe Exacerbation History | Symptom Score |
0 or 1 (not leading to hospital admission) | mMRC >=2 or CAT >=10 |
Category E (in GOLD 2024, category C and D groups were merged into a single group) is defined by:
Moderate or Severe Exacerbation History | Symptom Score |
>=2 or 1 leading to hospital admission | mMRC 0 or 1 or CAT <10 mMRC >=2 or CAT >=10 |
The combined COPD assessment allows patients with the same FEV1 (defined by the GOLD criteria) to be differentiated based on symptomatology, for example
COPD assessment test
COPD assessment test (CAT) is an 8-item uni-dimensional measure of health status impairment in COPD.
CAT questionnaire can be found at http://www.catestonline.org/
St. George's Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ) is the most widely documented comprehensive measure which uses a score of >=25 as the cut-off point for considering regular treatment for symptoms. The equivalent cut-off point for CAT is 10
Reference:
Annotations allow you to add information to this page that would be handy to have on hand during a consultation. E.g. a website or number. This information will always show when you visit this page.